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Filter articles published since 2015 by topic, disease, or article type.

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For instance, if "Biomarkers" and "Genetics" are selected in the Topic category, and "Multiple sclerosis" is selected in the Disease category, all results that match EITHER the Biomarkers OR Genetics Topic category will be shown, but only if they also match the Multiple sclerosis Disease category; i.e. Boolean search of [("Biomarkers" OR "Genetics") AND "multiple sclerosis"]

For Better and Worse, TDP-43 Controls Microglia’s Phagocytic Prowess

In Alzheimer’s disease, microglia reveal their two faces: On the one hand, they serve as protective scavengers of toxic Aβ protein deposits. On the other, amyloid incites them to phagocytose healthy synapses and contribute to neurodegeneration. Now, a study uncovers an unexpected connection between the ALS/FTD-associated protein TDP-43, microglial phagocytic activity, and synapse loss that could have ramifications for multiple neurodegenerative diseases. When researchers in the lab of Lawrence Rajendran, University of Zurich, deleted TDP-43 in microglia, they saw the cells’ production of lysosomes and their phagocytic activity shoot up. On the up side, that led to more aggressive clearance of Aβ and lower plaque load in mouse models of AD. On the down side, the TDP-less microglia avidly gobbled up synapses, even in animals without amyloid. The authors contend that clinical data support their idea that people with TDP-43 pathology clear amyloid more effectively: They appear to have a lower incidence of AD and less amyloid deposition. Published online June 29 in Neuron, the work proposes a physiological role for TDP-43 in regulating microglial phagocytosis, and suggests that dysfunctional microglia could be directly responsible for neurodegeneration in ALS/FTD and other TDP-43 proteinopathies.

“This is a really interesting paper, which provides more support for the role of microglia in neurodegenerative diseases generally,” said Cynthia Lemere, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston. The results mirror her own lab’s recent work on microglia and complement-mediated synapse loss in AD models, where less-active microglia oversee less clearance of amyloid but also less synapse loss. Those mice have increased amyloid load, but better cognitive function (Shi et al., 2017). “Loss of TDP-43 moves everything exactly in the opposite direction—more active microglia, more clearance of Aβ, and at the same time, more synapse loss,” Lemere said. “These results say we have to be careful when we think about stimulating phagocytosis as a therapeutic approach—we really need to think through what that might be doing.”

Marco Colonna of Washington University in St. Louis called the paper “provocative” for its focus on loss of microglial TDP-43 function in neurodegeneration. “TDP-43 is supposed to be neurotoxic because it accumulates as misfolded protein in cytosolic granules in neurons. This work shows that loss of TDP-43 function also impacts disease, and not only in neurons,” he told Alzforum.

First author Rosa Paolicelli stumbled onto TDP-43 when she screened a panel of candidate proteins, all associated with late-onset AD or neurodegeneration, for their ability to regulate microglial clearance of Aβ. Paolicelli used siRNA to knock down candidates in the BV2 microglia cell line in culture, then measured the cells’ ability to take up and degrade Aβ. Of 18 genes tested, she found one hit: After knockdown of TDP-43, the BV2 cells became voracious consumers of Aβ. They cleared Aβ from conditioned media from either a wild-type mouse cell line or from HeLa cells expressing mutated human APP.

The result came as a surprise, Rajendran said. TDP-43 is an RNA binding protein, transcriptional repressor, and splicing factor. Normally a nuclear protein, TDP-43 forms cytoplasmic inclusions in glia and neurons in ALS and FTD, and in other neurodegenerative diseases. Loss of TDP-43 function in neurons causes cell death; before Paolicelli’s experiment, nothing was known of its role in microglia.

How did loss of TDP-43 increase Aβ uptake? Paolicelli found those cells nonspecifically jacked up phagocytosis, rapidly taking up Aβ and other cargoes, including labeled dextran and transferrin. After uptake, the cells degraded Aβ, thanks to increased lysosomal function and biogenesis in the BV2 cells. Primary microglia behaved in the same way.

To assess how TDP-43 affects amyloid clearance in vivo, the researchers created mice in which TDP-43 was inducibly knocked out only in microglia. In the mice, the researchers downregulated the TDP-43 transcript and protein by administering tamoxifen, then injected Aβ42 oligomers into the cortex. In the knockouts, microglia accumulated in the amyloid core and its vicinity in greater numbers, and engulfed more Aβ, than wild-type littermates. The researchers got similar results when they crossed the conditional TDP-43 knockout with the ArcAβ/APParc mouse model of AD. After tamoxifen treatment, the mice showed a 60 percent reduction in Aβ peptide levels in brain homogenates, and a similar reduction in plaque load, with no effect on Aβ production. Such active removal of amyloid seemed promising, Rajendran said, but his team’s enthusiasm waned when they noticed that the phagocytic microglia also set upon synapses, resulting in a significant drop in the levels of synaptic markers PSD95, synapsin, synaptophysin, and vGlut1 in cortical areas.

In mouse models of AD, microglial pruning of synapses depends on complement and on the presence of amyloid. Pruning in the TDP-43 knockout mice, however, did not require amyloid deposition. Even in non-AD, wild-type mice, microglial TDP-43 knockout led to a loss of synaptic markers and decreased cortical dendritic spine density. More microglia contained traces of engulfed synapses than in wild-type mice (see image above). “This is important because it shows we don’t need another pathology, or that microglia activation is a secondary effect of Aβ load,” said Rajendran. “Removal of TDP-43 is sufficient to activate an aberrant phagocytosis phenotype, and as a result the microglia gulp up Aβ and also synapses.” The scientists have not tested whether the synaptic clearing was still dependent on complement protein C3, he said.

Are these findings relevant to human disease? If microglia lacking TDP-43 are turbocharged to remove Aβ, the authors reasoned, people with TDP-43 pathology might show a lower incidence of AD. They analyzed a cohort of 698 people with ALS, of whom 98 percent would be expected to have TDP-43 inclusions. They found that, among the 168 patients older than 75, 12 had AD, an incidence of 7.1 percent, compared to an expected incidence of 17 percent in this age group. This supports the idea that TDP43 pathology might be associated with delayed onset or less AD, Rajendran believes, presumably due to less amyloid deposition. At the same time, patients with ALS did experience a subtle decrease in cognitive function with age, which the authors speculate may be due to synapse loss.

The researchers also measured amyloid load in a brain autopsy cohort, comparing 40 controls with 62 subjects with AD and 60 with TDP-43 pathology (35 cases of ALS and 25 of FTLD with TDP-43). They saw a similar plaque burden across several brain regions in younger controls (65-74 years old) and the TDP-43 patients. In older cases (75 years old or more), they detected increased Aβ in normal healthy brains and even higher levels in AD cases. In contrast, Aβ levels in TDP-43 patients were lower than either AD or control subjects. The authors interpret this to indicate increased Aβ clearance in the TDP-43 patients. However, this conclusion was questioned by several researchers who told Alzforum they would like to see more details of the demographic differences between the groups, especially age and sex. ALS and FTLD-TDP occur at younger ages than AD, and a difference in age distribution in the groups might lead to apparent differences in amyloid load, for example.

The part of the study dealing with the relationship between amyloid and TDP-43 pathology in people raised skepticism from researchers not involved in the work. In their comment (see below), Carol Brayne, Suvi Hokkanen, and Sally Hunter, University of Cambridge, England, U.K., sound a cautionary note that the limited data shown may not represent a larger universe of TDP-43 pathology patients. In their work and the work of others, they find no relationship between TDP-43 and amyloid pathology in population-representative samples (Keage et al., 2014).

Rik Ossenkoppele, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, is first author on a meta-analysis of PET studies looking at amyloid pathology across multiple neurodegenerative diseases (Ossenkoppele et al, 2015). His analysis did show a lower prevalence of amyloid pathology in FTD patients than in healthy controls, he wrote to Alzforum in an email. “Still, I would not consider this direct evidence for enhanced clearance of amyloid pathology in people with TDP-43 diseases, as FTD is caused by a variety of pathogenic proteins (i.e., 3R/4R tau, TDP type A/B/C/D/U, FUS), and it’s unclear from our clinical data whether it is TDP or the other pathologies that are associated with a reduction of amyloid pathology,” he wrote. Ossenkoppele told Alzforum that he has additional unpublished data on a disease group with homogenous TDP-43 pathology, where the prevalence of amyloid pathology is not lower than in the general population.

What about a role for TDP-43 microglial pathology in ALS and other TDP-43 proteinopathies? The authors report finding microglial TDP-43 cytoplasmic inclusions, albeit rare, in four out of four patients with motor neuron disease. Glial inclusions have been reported previously, Brayne and colleagues wrote, but are frequently disregarded, and “the current study usefully highlights this important aspect.” The authors also report an increase in CD68 staining in the vicinity of TDP-43 pathology in human brain tissues. Whether this indicates a critical role for TDP-43 in regulating microglia, or is merely an expected accompaniment to neurodegeneration independent of TDP-53, remains to be clarified.

Filter articles published since 2015 by topic, disease, or article type.

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Results are filtered to show all matching articles from a particular category, and to show only articles that match all selected categories.

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